You Really Got Me#Van Halen version
{{Short description|1964 single by the Kinks}}
{{good article}}
{{Use British English|date=February 2014}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2022}}
{{Infobox song
| name = You Really Got Me
| cover = You Really Got Me cover.jpg
| alt =
| caption = Dutch single sleeve
| type = single
| artist = the Kinks
| album = Kinks
| B-side = It's All Right
| released = {{Start date|1964|08|04|df=yes}}
| recorded = July 1964
| studio = IBC, London
| genre =
| length = 2:20
| label = *Pye (UK)
- Reprise (US)
| writer = Ray Davies
| producer = Shel Talmy
| chronology = The Kinks UK singles
| prev_title = You Still Want Me
| prev_year = 1964
| next_title = All Day and All of the Night
| next_year = 1964
| misc = {{External music video|header=Official audio|{{YouTube|fTTsY-oz6Go|"You Really Got Me"}}}}
{{Extra chronology
| artist = The Kinks US singles
| type = single
| prev_title = Long Tall Sally
| prev_year = 1964
| title = You Really Got Me
| year = 1964
| next_title = All Day and All of the Night
| next_year = 1964
}}
}}
"You Really Got Me" is a song by the English rock band the Kinks, written by frontman Ray Davies and released as their third single in 1964. The song, originally performed in a more blues-oriented style, was inspired by artists such as Lead Belly and Big Bill Broonzy. Two versions were recorded, with the second performance used for the final single. Lead guitarist Dave Davies performs the song's famous guitar solo. Although it was long rumoured that future Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page had performed the song's guitar solo, this has been debunked by Page himself.{{cite journal| url=https://www.allmusic.com/blog/post/the-kinks-mick-avory-talks-new-anthology-you-really-got-me-and-if-a-reunion |first=Greg |last=Prato |title=The Kinks' Mick Avory Talks New Anthology, 'You Really Got Me,' and If A Reunion Is Possible |journal=AllMusic |date=28 March 2023|access-date=3 April 2023 }}
"You Really Got Me" is built around power chords (perfect fifths and octaves) and it heavily influenced later rock musicians, particularly in the heavy metal and punk rock genres.{{harvnb|Fleiner|2017|p=54}}: "Musicologists argue that 'You Really Got Me' was the origin of heavy metal and the beginnings of punk." Built around a guitar riff played by Dave Davies, its lyrics were described by Dave as "a love song for street kids".{{sfn|Hasted|2011}}
The song was released in the UK on 4 August 1964 by Pye Records as the group's third single, and reached number one on the Record Retailer chart the following month, remaining there for two weeks. It was released in the US on 2 September by Reprise Records. The song became the group's breakthrough hit. It established them as one of the top British Invasion acts in the United States, reaching number seven later in the year. "You Really Got Me" was later included on the Kinks' debut album, Kinks. American rock band Van Halen covered the song in their 1978 eponymous debut album; it was released as their first single and peaked at No. 36 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song was also covered by American rock band Oingo Boingo in their 1981 album Only a Lad.{{citation needed|date=March 2025}}
Background
{{quote box|quote=[The original demo version of 'You Really Got Me'] had very way-out words and a funny sort of ending that didn't. We did it differently on the record because [this original version] was really rather uncommercial.|source= – Ray Davies{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=24}}|width=28%|align=left|style=padding:8px;}}
"You Really Got Me" was written by Ray Davies, the Kinks' vocalist and main songwriter, sometime between 9 and 12 March 1964.{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=24}} Created on the piano in the front room of the Davies' home, the song was stylistically very different from the finished product, being much lighter and somewhat jazz-oriented.{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=24}} Ray said of the song's writing, "When I came up with ['You Really Got Me'] I hadn't been writing songs very long at all. It was one of the first five I ever came up with."{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=24}}
Davies said that he had been inspired to write the song one night during his college days playing with the Dave Hunt Band, when he saw an attractive girl on the dance floor. He said: "When we finished, I went off to find her, but she was gone and never returned to the club. She really got me going."{{cite book |last=Myers|first=Marc |author-link= Marc Myers|date=2016 |title=Anatomy of a Song |publisher=Grove Press |pages=35–39 |isbn=978-1-61185-525-8}}
During the spring of 1964, Ray Davies played an early version of "You Really Got Me" on the piano to rock photographer Allan Ballard during a photo shoot. Ballard later remembered, "It was quite a small, pokey, Victorian Terrace, a bit scruffy, and in the hallway they had an upright piano. Ray sat down and plonked out, 'Der-der, der, Der-der!' He said, 'What do you reckon to this?' It meant nothing to me at the time, but it ended up as 'You Really Got Me'."{{sfn|Jovanovic|2014|p=64}}
Ray, initially planning for the song to be a "more laid-back number", later played the chords of the song to brother Dave Davies, the Kinks' lead guitarist. However, upon hearing the track, Dave decided that the riff would be much more powerful on a guitar.{{sfn|Jovanovic|2014|p=64}} Ray said of the track's change to a guitar-centred track, "I wanted it to be a jazz-type tune, because that's what I liked at the time. It's written originally around a sax line ... Dave ended up playing the sax line in fuzz guitar and it took the song a step further."{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=24}} The band began performing the new track in some of their live shows, where it was well received.{{sfn|Jovanovic|2014|p=65}}
In 1998, Ray said, "I'd written 'You Really Got Me' as tribute to all those great blues people I love: Lead Belly and Big Bill Broonzy." Dave cited Gerry Mulligan as an inspiration, saying, "Ray was a great fan of Gerry Mulligan, who was in [the Jazz on a Summer's Day movie], and as he sat at the piano at home, he sort of messed around in a vein similar to Mulligan and came up with this figure based on a 12-bar blues".{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=24}} Dave has also said that song had been inspired by Jimmy Giuffre's song "The Train and the River". According to the band's manager, Larry Page, the song's characteristic riff came about while working out the chords of the Kingsmen's "Louie Louie".{{sfn|Hasted|2011}} Lyrically, the song was said to be influenced by an encounter with one of the band's "first serious female fans".{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=24}}{{cite journal| url=http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/sep09/articles/classictracks_0909.htm |first=Richard |last=Buskin |title=The Kinks 'You Really Got Me' Classic Track |journal=Sound on Sound |date=September 2009|access-date=24 June 2011 }}
Recording
{{quote box|quote= When I first heard ["You Really Got Me"], I said, "Shit, it doesn't matter what you do with this, it's a number one song". It could have been done in waltz time and it would have been a hit.{{sfn|Jovanovic|2014|p=65}}|source= – Shel Talmy, producer of "You Really Got Me"|width=25%|align=right|style=padding:8px;}}
The Kinks recorded "You Really Got Me" at least twice in mid-1964, likely around June 14 and July 12.{{sfn|Hinman|2004|pp=28, 29, 31}} The band's demo was in a "bluesy" style, while a full studio version recorded in June was slower and less emphatic than the final single.{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=28}} Shel Talmy had, according to Davies, covered the track in reverb, all but burying the lead guitar. The band wanted to rerecord the song, but their record company Pye refused to fund another session on the grounds that the band's first two singles had failed to chart.{{sfn|Jovanovic|2014|p=65}} Ray Davies, however, threatened that he would refuse to perform or promote the single unless it was re-recorded.{{sfn|Jovanovic|2014|p=65}} Manager Larry Page also refused to publish the original recording.{{sfn|Jovanovic|2014|p=65}} When Pye stood its ground, the band's own management broke the stalemate by funding the session themselves.{{sfn|Jovanovic|2014|pp=65-66}} Ray Davies' adamant attitude on behalf of the career-making song effectively established him as the leader and chief songwriter of the Kinks. Davies later said, "I was floundering around trying to find an identity. It was in 1964 that I managed to do that, to be able to justify myself and say, 'I exist, I'm here.' I was literally born when that song hit."{{sfn|Jovanovic|2014|p=67}}
The influential distortion sound of the guitar track was created after guitarist Dave Davies sliced the speaker cone of his guitar amplifier with a razor blade and poked it with a pin. The amplifier was affectionately called "little green", after the name of the amplifier made by the Elpico company, and purchased in Davies' neighbourhood music shop, linked to a Vox AC-30.{{cite news |url= https://www.theguardian.com/music/2013/jun/10/how-we-made-you-really-got-me |title=How we made You Really Got Me|first= Dave|last= Simpson|work=The Guardian |date=10 June 2013|location=London |issn=0261-3077 |oclc=60623878 |access-date=24 June 2013}} In 2014, Dave Davies accused brother Ray of lying about participating in Dave's guitar distortion sound. Dave wrote on his Facebook page, "My brother is lying. I don't know why he does this but it was my Elpico amp that I bought and out of frustration I cut the speaker cone up with a razor blade and I was so shocked and surprised and excited that it worked that I demonstrated the sound to Ray and [Kinks bassist] Pete [Quaife]{{nbsp}}... Ray liked the sound and he had written a riff on the piano which formed the basis of the song 'You Really Got Me' and I played the riff on my guitar with my new sound. I alone created this sound."{{Cite web|title = The Kinks' Dave Davies Says His Brother Ray "Is Lying" About Creating "You Really Got Me" Guitar Sound|url = http://abcnewsradioonline.com/music-news/2014/12/1/the-kinks-dave-davies-says-his-brother-ray-is-lying-about-cr.html|website = ABC News Radio|access-date = 5 August 2015|archive-date = 26 November 2015|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20151126041544/http://abcnewsradioonline.com/music-news/2014/12/1/the-kinks-dave-davies-says-his-brother-ray-is-lying-about-cr.html|url-status = dead}}
According to recent Kinks' releases that give full official performance credits of the track, group members Ray Davies (vocals and rhythm guitar), Dave Davies (lead guitar), Pete Quaife (bass) are joined by session men Bobby Graham (drums), and Arthur Greenslade (piano).{{Cite AV media notes| title = Picture Book| year = 2008| publisher = Sanctuary Records| type = CD boxed set notes| oclc = 298443589}}{{Cite AV media notes| title=The Kinks Deluxe Edition | year = 2011| publisher = Sanctuary Records| type = CD notes| oclc = 873524939}} Regular Kinks drummer Mick Avory plays the tambourine.
Guitar solo
The guitar solo on the recording has been the subject of the persistent myth that it was not played by the Kinks' lead guitarist Dave Davies, but by then-session player Jimmy Page, who later joined the Yardbirds and Led Zeppelin. Among those claiming Page played lead guitar was Jon Lord of Deep Purple, who also claimed to play piano on the track.{{cite web|last1=Lalaina|first1=Joe|title=Jon Lord's Purple Reign|url=http://www.thehighwaystar.com/interviews/lord/jl19890100.html|website=The Highway Star (archived from Modern Keyboard Magazine, January 1989)|access-date=24 June 2011}} Page has always denied playing the song's guitar solo, going so far as to say in a 1970s interview cited in Sound on Sound magazine, "I didn't play on 'You Really Got Me' and that's what pisses him [Ray Davies] off." Rock historian and author Doug Hinman makes a case that the rumour was begun and fostered by the established British rhythm and blues community, many of whose members were resentful that an upstart band of teenagers such as the Kinks could produce such a powerful and influential blues-based recording seemingly out of nowhere.{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=30}}
Shel Talmy, the producer on the track, put the controversy to rest in an interview with The Guardian, saying, "contrary to myth, Jimmy didn't play on 'You Really Got Me'." In a 7 November 2014 interview with SiriusXM's Town Hall series, Page confirmed again that he did not play on the song, saying "Oh, Crikey! I wasn't on 'You Really Got Me,' but I did play on the Kinks' records. That's all I'm going to say about it. But every time I do an interview, people ask me about 'You Really Got Me.' So maybe somebody can correct Wikipedia so people won't keep asking me."{{cite magazine|last1=Grow|first1=Kory|title=5 Things We Learned from Jimmy Page's SiriusXM Interview|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/5-things-we-learned-from-jimmy-pages-siriusxm-interview-20141107|magazine=Rolling Stone|date=7 November 2014|access-date=26 April 2015}} Drummer Mick Avory also confirmed that the guitar solo was played by Dave Davies and not Jimmy Page in an interview with AllMusic in 2023.
In his 1998 autobiographical release The Storyteller,[http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-storyteller-r347764 Ray Davies: The Storyteller]. AllMusic Ray Davies discusses the guitar solo. He confirms that his brother Dave played the solo and it was preceded by some bantering between the two:
{{blockquote|Halfway through the song it was time for Dave's guitar solo. This moment had to be right. So I shouted across the studio to Dave, give him encouragement. But I seemed to spoil his concentration. He looked at me with a dazed expression. 'Fuck off.' If you doubt me, if you doubt what I'm saying, I challenge you to listen to the original Kinks recording of 'You Really Got Me'. Halfway through the song, after the second chorus, before the guitar solo, there's a drum break. Boo ka, boo boo ka, boo ka, boo boo. And in the background you can hear 'fuck off'. You can, you can. When I did the vocal I tried to cover it up by going 'Oh no', but in the background you still hear it 'fuck off'. And it's even clearer on CD, it's really embarrassing.{{cite AV media | people = Ray Davies | year = 1998 | title = The Storyteller | chapter = The Third Single (Dialogue) | medium = Sound recording | publisher = EMI/Capitol Records | oclc = 63515902}}|}}
Music and lyrics
{{quote box|quote=Every aspect of the song's construction is governed by the riff, a rapid alteration of bass notes a whole tone apart{{nbsp}}... this element probably accounts almost single-handedly for the song's popularity.|source=Matthew Gelbart, musicologist{{sfn|Gelbart|2003|p=214}}|width=25%|align=right|style=padding:8px;}}
Commentators have described "You Really Got Me" as garage rock,{{sfn|Creswell|2007|p=684}} hard rock, rock and roll,{{cite web|last=Swanson|first=Dave|date=11 April 2012|title=No. 59: The Kinks, 'You Really Got Me' – Top 100 Classic Rock Songs|url=https://ultimateclassicrock.com/the-kinks-you-really-got-me-top-100-classic-rock-songs/|access-date=26 September 2020|website=Ultimate Classic Rock}} and proto-punk.{{cite news|last=Gewen|first=Barry|date=5 March 2008|title=Ray Davies, Rock Poet?|newspaper=The New York Times|url=http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/03/05/ray-davies-rock-poet/|access-date=22 November 2020}} While Ray Davies had been instructed at the time to write "Beatle-type" material for commercial reasons, "You Really Got Me" was written as a more R&B-based composition.{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=24}} The song is centred on a guitar riff that has been called "instantly identifiable". American musicologist Robert Walser described "You Really Got Me" as "the first hit song built around power chords."{{sfn|Walser|1993|p=9}}
The song has been labeled an early influence of the heavy metal genre, with critic Denise Sullivan of AllMusic writing, {{"'}}You Really Got Me' remains a blueprint song in the hard rock and heavy metal arsenal."Sullivan, Denise. [{{AllMusic|class=song|id=t4750179|pure_url=yes}} "Review of 'You Really Got Me' "]. AllMusic. Dave Davies has rejected the idea that the song is heavy metal, saying: "I've never really like that term, heavy metal. I think, in all humility, it was the first heavy guitar riff rock record. Just because of the sound—if you played it on a ukulele, it might not have been so powerful."{{sfn|Hasted|2011}}
The lyrics of the song are about lust and sex.{{sfn|Jovanovic|2014|p=64}} Dave Davies said of the song's lyrics, {{"'}}You Really Got Me' [is] such a pure record, really. It's a love song for street kids. They're not going to wine and dine you, even if they knew how to chat you up. [They say] 'I want you—come here.{{'"}}{{sfn|Hasted|2011}}
Release and reception
File:You Really Got Me - It's All Right - Billboard ad 1964.jpg advertisement, September 5, 1964]]
"You Really Got Me" was released as the band's third single on 4 August 1964, backed with "It's All Right" (also spelled "It's Alright").{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=31}} Within three days of the single's release, "You Really Got Me" began to appear on local charts. Eventually, the song climbed to the top of the British charts, the band's first single to do so.{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=31}} Ray Davies later claimed that, due to the single's high demand, Pye Records put all their other records on hold to solely produce copies of "You Really Got Me".{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=31}} Due to the high level of success the single achieved in the UK, a rush-release of "You Really Got Me" was put out in the US on 2 September 1964, despite being delayed from its initial release date of 26 August.{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=34}} Although it did not enter the charts until 26 September, the record rose to number seven on the Billboard Hot 100.{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=34}}
The song later appeared on the band's debut album, Kinks, with the title of the American release of the album changed to You Really Got Me. Plans for Ray to sing versions of the song in French, German, Spanish, and Japanese for their respective markets were proposed by Shel Talmy but never materialised.{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=32}} The single B-side, "It's All Right", was included on the UK EP Kinksize Hits (1964).{{cite AV media notes| year = 1964| title = Kinksize Hits| type = EP notes| others = The Kinks| location = London| publisher = Pye Records| id = NEP 24203| at = Back cover}} It was first issued on an album in the US, where it was included on the Kinks' third album Kinkdom (1965).{{cite AV media notes| year = 1965| title = Kinks Kinkdom| type = Album notes| others = The Kinks| publisher = Reprise Records| id = R 6184| at = Back cover}} Music writers have called the song "shockingly different" from the Kinks' recorded work up to this point, and a "frenetic lost gem".{{sfn|Jovanovic|2014|p=}}{{sfn|Unterberger|2002|p=621}} The song is included on a 1998 CD reissue of the group's debut album.{{sfn|Unterberger|2002|p=621}}
{{quote box|quote=We were really surprised when 'You Really Got Me' was a hit. Why wasn't our last disc, 'You Still Want Me'? Because it wasn't any good. We didn't like it much ... We write for ourselves now.|source= – Ray Davies{{sfn|Hasted|2011}}|width=25%|align=left|style=padding:8px;}}
Upon release, the single received a positive review from Record Mirror, which said, "Highly promising group with strong guitar sound and a compact sort of vocal performance. Mid-tempo but bustling song should sell well."{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=31}} In Melody Maker, singer Dave Berry was featured in a blindfold test of the song, with Berry at first guessing the song was by the Kingsmen.{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=31}} He said, "It's fabulous, this one. I like these records that sound as if they've gone into a recording studio and done what they wanted to on the spot. It's a good chance of being a big hit."{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=31}} The Melody Maker review had a lasting impact on Ray Davies, who said that Berry "had a few hits—so he mattered" and that Berry's belief that the band had "done what they wanted" had "said it all" for him.{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=31}}{{sfn|Jovanovic|2014|p=70}} In the U.S., Cash Box called the single "a pulsating, blues-flavored rock-a-rhythmic...that builds along the way."{{cite magazine |title=CashBox Record Reviews |date=12 September 1964 |page=12 |access-date=12 January 2022 |url=https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/Cash-Box/60s/1964/CB-1964-09-12.pdf |magazine=Cash Box}}
The Kinks' use of distorted guitar riffs continued with songs like "All Day and All of the Night", "Tired of Waiting for You", and "Set Me Free", among others. Pete Townshend of the Who, a band also produced by Talmy at that time, has stated that their first single, "I Can't Explain", was influenced by the Kinks' work at the time.{{sfn|Jovanovic|2014|p=79}} Other artists influenced by "You Really Got Me" include Tom Petty,{{sfn|Jovanovic|2014|p=72}} John Lydon,{{sfn|Jovanovic|2014|p=51}} Joe Jackson,{{sfn|Jackson|2000}} Chris Bell of Big Star,{{sfn|Jovanovic|2014|p=72}} and Jimi Hendrix, who, according to Dave Davies, described the song as "a landmark record".{{sfn|Hasted|2011}}
In 1999, "You Really Got Me" was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.[http://www.grammy.org/recording-academy/awards/hall-of-fame#y "Grammy Hall of Fame Award"] Grammy.org Retrieved 20 December 2012 Rolling Stone magazine placed the song at number 82 on their list of the 500 greatest songs of all time and at number four on their list of the 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time.{{cite magazine| title=The 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time |magazine=Rolling Stone |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080625061017/http://www.rollingstone.com/news/coverstory/20947527/page/41 |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/news/coverstory/20947527/page/41 |archive-date=25 June 2008 | url-status=dead |access-date=23 June 2010}} In early 2005, the song was voted the best British song of the 1955–1965 decade in a BBC radio poll.{{cite news|title=Kinks edge Beatles in song vote|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/4573259.stm|website=BBC News|date=23 May 2005|access-date=30 April 2015}} In March 2005, Q magazine placed it at number nine in its list of the 100 Greatest Guitar Tracks.{{cite web|title=Greatest Guitar Tracks|url=http://www.ultimate-guitar.com/news/general_music_news/greatest_guitar_tracks.html?no_takeover|website=Ultimate Guitar (archived from Q)|access-date=30 April 2015}} In 2009, it was named the 57th Greatest Hard Rock Song by VH1.{{cite web|title=VH1 Top 100 Hard Rock Songs|url=http://music.spreadit.org/vh1-top-100-hard-rock-songs/|publisher=Spreadit.org|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160421175832/http://music.spreadit.org/vh1-top-100-hard-rock-songs/|archive-date=21 April 2016|date=1 January 2009| access-date= 7 February 2009}}
Live history
{{Infobox song
| name = You Really Got Me (live)
| cover =
| alt =
| type = single
| artist = the Kinks
| album = One for the Road
| B-side = Attitude
| released = {{Start date|1980|10|29|df=yes}}
| recorded = 6 March 1979
| venue = Lowell Memorial Auditorium, Massachusetts
| genre =
| length = {{Duration|3:35}}
| label = Arista
| writer = Ray Davies
| producer = Ray Davies
| chronology = The Kinks US
| prev_title = Lola (live)
| prev_year = 1980
| next_title = Destroyer
| next_year = 1981
}}
Before its release, the Kinks performed "You Really Got Me" in some of their early concerts.{{sfn|Hasted|2011}} It was a crowd favourite, with Ray Davies later claiming to feel a connection with the crowd as he performed the song.{{sfn|Hasted|2011}} Ray later said, "Our success came from playing [the song] live. When we played 'You Really Got Me' people actually took notice. They realised we had something original."{{sfn|Hasted|2011}}
The Kinks continued to perform successfully for over 30 years through many musical styles, but "You Really Got Me" remained a mainstay in concert.{{sfn|Hinman|2004|pp=8–341}} During some shows, the song was played in a medley with its follow-up single "All Day and All of the Night", while in 1977, a performance on Saturday Night Live featured a four-song medley of "You Really Got Me", "All Day and All of the Night", "A Well Respected Man", and "Lola".{{sfn|Hinman|2004|pp=342-344}} In a live performance on the Don Lane Show in 1982, "You Really Got Me" was featured in a medley with the band's 1981 song, "Destroyer".{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=344}} In 1984, Dave Davies claimed that, even after twenty years of performing "You Really Got Me", the track was "still fun to play live."{{cite web|last1=Clapton|first1=Diana|title=Dave Davies - In the Spotlight|url=http://www.davedavies.com/articles/fac_0284.htm|website=davedavies.com}}
A live version of "You Really Got Me" was released on the band's 1980 live album, One for the Road. This version, following the minor success of the same album's live version of "Lola", was released as a single in America, backed with the live take of Low Budget's "Attitude".{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=244}} It failed to chart.{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=244}} This version was later included on the 1986 compilation album Come Dancing with the Kinks: The Best of the Kinks 1977–1986.{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=282}}
Other live renditions of "You Really Got Me" have also been released. A version on Live at Kelvin Hall recorded at Kelvin Hall in Glasgow, Scotland, was released in 1967, while a performance at the Mann Music Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, appeared on 1994's To the Bone.{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=320}} The Davies brothers also performed a live version in Boston, Massachusetts with the Smithereens in November 1991, which later appeared on the latter band's 1995 compilation album Attack of the Smithereens.{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=336}} Ray and Dave Davies still perform the song in solo shows, generally as a closing number.{{citation needed|date=September 2021}}
In December 2015, Ray Davies joined Dave onstage at one of his concerts to perform "You Really Got Me".{{cite magazine|last1=Kreps|first1=Daniel|title=Watch the Kinks' Ray and Dave Davies Reunite Onstage for 'You Really Got Me'|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/watch-the-kinks-ray-and-dave-davies-reunite-onstage-for-you-really-got-me-20151219|magazine=Rolling Stone|date=19 December 2015}} The event marked the first time the brothers performed on stage together in nearly 20 years, sparking rumours of a Kinks reunion.{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2018/06/26/ray-davies-kinks-officially-getting-back-together/|title=Ray Davies: The Kinks are officially getting back together|newspaper=Daily Telegraph|date=26 June 2018|access-date=26 October 2018}}
Personnel
According to Doug Hinman:{{sfn|Hinman|2004|pp=29–30}}
The Kinks
- Ray Davies{{snd}} lead vocal, rhythm guitar
- Dave Davies{{snd}} backing vocal, lead guitar
- Pete Quaife{{snd}} backing vocal, bass guitar
- Mick Avory{{snd}} tambourine
Additional musicians
- Bobby Graham{{snd}} drums
- Arthur Greenslade{{snd}} piano
- Unknown session musician{{refn|group=nb|Hinman writes a guitarist from Edward Kassner's office played additional rhythm guitar, "likely Harry, possibly Bob or Vic, surname unknown".{{sfn|Hinman|2004|p=29}}}}{{snd}} rhythm guitar
Charts
{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
=Weekly charts=
{{col-2}}
=Year-end charts=
class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center" |
align="left"|Chart (1964)
! style="text-align:center;"|Position |
---|
scope="row"|US Billboard Year-End{{Cite magazine| author = | date = 2 January 1965| title = Top Records of 1964| magazine = Billboard| volume = 77| issue = 1| issn = 0006-2510| page = 6}}
| style="text-align:center;"|79 |
{{col-end}}
Certifications
{{Certification Table Top}}
{{Certification Table Entry|region=Italy|type=single|artist=Kinks|title=You Really Got Me|award=Gold|relyear=1964|certyear=2024|access-date=October 21, 2024|id=13390}}
{{Certification Table Entry|region=Spain|type=single|artist=Kinks|title=You Really Got Me|award=Gold|relyear=1964|certyear=2024|access-date=November 19, 2024}}
{{Certification Table Entry|region=United Kingdom|type=single|artist=Kinks|title=You Really Got Me|award=Platinum|relyear=2005|certyear=2023|id=14166-1446-1|access-date=7 July 2023}}
{{Certification Table Bottom|nosales=true|noshipments=true|streaming=true}}
Van Halen version
{{Infobox song
| name = You Really Got Me
| cover = Van Halen - You Really Got Me.jpg
| alt =
| type = single
| artist = Van Halen
| album = Van Halen
| B-side = Atomic Punk
| released = {{Start date|1978|01|df=y}}
| recorded = September–October 1977
| studio = Sunset Sound Recorders, Hollywood
| genre =
| length = {{Duration|2:35}}
| label = Warner Bros.
| writer = Ray Davies
| producer = Ted Templeman
| next_title = Runnin' with the Devil
| next_year = 1978
| misc = {{Audio sample
| type = single
| file = Vhyoureallygotme.ogg
}}
{{External music video
| type = single
| header = Music videos
| 1 = {{YouTube|9X6e7uctAww|"You Really Got Me"}}
}}
}}
{{anchor|Van Halen}}The American hard rock band Van Halen released a cover of "You Really Got Me" on its self-titled 1978 debut album. As the band's first single, it was a popular radio hit that helped jump-start the band's career,[http://www.rockhall.com/inductees/van-halen "Van Halen - Inductee 2007"]. Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. 12 March 2007. Retrieved 8 May 2009. as it had done for the Kinks 14 years earlier. This version, which Eddie Van Halen called an "updated" version of the original, featured "histrionic" guitar playing by himself and "vocal shenanigans" by David Lee Roth. The song had been played by the band live for years before its studio release. On the radio, it is often featured with "Eruption", the instrumental that precedes it on the album, as an intro.{{sfn|Tolinsky|2010|p=39}}
The song was released as a single as a result of an encounter between Van Halen and members of the band Angel. Van Halen and Angel drummer Barry Brandt had both been bragging about their new material to one another, resulting in Van Halen showing Brandt a demo of "You Really Got Me". The next day, the band's producer, Ted Templeman, told Van Halen that Angel was recording its own cover of "You Really Got Me" to release before Van Halen's version. As a result, the song was rush-released as a single before Angel could do so.{{sfn|Tolinsky|2010|p=101}}
Record World said that it's a "supercharged, heavier version" than the Kinks' version and that "it's still a fine, primal rocker."{{cite magazine|magazine=Record World|date=January 21, 1978|accessdate=2023-02-15|title=Single Picks|page=14|url=https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/Record-World/70s/78/Record-World-1978-01-21.pdf}}
Eddie Van Halen later expressed dissatisfaction with the use of "You Really Got Me" as the band's debut single. He said, "It kind of bummed me out that Ted [Templeman] wanted our first single to be someone else's tune. I would have maybe picked "Jamie's Cryin'{{'"}}, just because it was our own."{{sfn|Tolinsky|2010|p=101}}
The Kinks' Dave Davies has claimed to dislike Van Halen's rendition of the song, saying "There's the thing: good art isn't always about having the comfiest technique. I shouldn't encourage him, but I'm sure Eddie Van Halen played better when he was drunk." He also told of how a concert-goer approached him after a live show and congratulated him on performing a "great cover of the Van Halen song".[http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=143902 "Dave Davies Slams Van Halen's The Kinks Cover"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100806173740/http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=143902 |date=6 August 2010 }}. Blabbermouth. 2 August 2010. Ray Davies, on the other hand, claimed to like the track because it made him laugh.{{sfn|Jovanovic|2014|p=244}}
class="wikitable"
!Chart (2020) !Peak |
{{single chart|Billboardrocksongs|21|artist=Van Halen|access-date=13 October 2020}} |
See also
Notes
{{Reflist|group=nb}}
References
Citations
{{Reflist}}
Bibliography
{{refbegin|30em|indent=yes}}
- {{cite book
| last=Creswell
| first=Toby
| year=2007
| title=1001 Songs
| publisher=Hardie Grant
| isbn=978-1-74066-458-5}}
- {{cite book |last1=Fleiner |first1=Carey |title=The Kinks: A Thoroughly English Phenomenon |date=2017 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |location=Lanham, Maryland |isbn=978-1-4422-3542-7 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CIKHDQAAQBAJ |via=Google Books}}
- {{Cite journal
| last=Gelbart
| first=Matthew
| title=Persona and Voice in the Kinks' Songs of the Late 1960s
| journal=Journal of the Royal Musical Association
| date=2003
| volume=128
| issue=2
| pages=200–241
| doi=10.1093/jrma/128.2.200
| issn=0269-0403}}
- {{cite book
| last=Hasted
| first=Nick
| year=2011
| title=You Really Got Me: The Story of the Kinks
| publisher=Omnibus Press
| isbn=978-1849386609
| url-access=registration
| url=https://archive.org/details/storyofkinksyour0000hast}}
- {{cite book
| last=Hinman
| first=Doug
| year=2004
| title=The Kinks: All Day and All of the Night: Day by Day Concerts, Recordings, and Broadcasts, 1961-1996
| publisher=Backbeat Books
| isbn=978-0879307653}}
- {{cite book
| last=Jackson
| first=Joe
| title=A Cure for Gravity
| year=2000
| publisher=Anchor Books
| isbn=978-1862300842}}
- {{cite book
| last=Jovanovic
| first=Rob
| year=2014
| title=God Save The Kinks: A Biography
| publisher=Aurum Press
| isbn=978-1781311646}}
- {{cite book
| last=Tolinsky
| first=Brad
| year=2010
| title=Guitar World Presents Van Halen
| publisher=Backbeat Books
| isbn=978-0879309695}}
- {{cite encyclopedia
| last = Unterberger
| first = Richie
| author-link = Richie Unterberger
| year = 2002
| title = Kinks
| editor-last3 = Erlewine
| editor-first3 = Stephen Thomas
| editor-link3 = Stephen Thomas Erlewine
| editor-last = Bogdanov
| editor-first = Vladimir
| editor-link = Vladimir Bogdanov (editor)
| editor-last2 = Woodstra
| editor-first2 = Chris
| encyclopedia = All Music Guide to Rock: The Definitive Guide to Rock, Pop, and Soul
| location = San Francisco
| publisher = Backbeat Books
| isbn = 0-87930-653-X}}
- {{cite book
| last=Walser
| first=Robert
| year=1993
| title=Running with the Devil: Power, Gender, and Madness in Heavy Metal Music
| publisher=Wesleyan University Press
| isbn=0-8195-6260-2
| url-access=registration
| url=https://archive.org/details/runningwithdevil00wals}}
{{Refend}}
Further reading
- {{cite book|title=Van Halen Guitar Anthology|pages=33–9|publisher=Alfred|location=Van Nuys, California|year=2006|isbn=9780897246729|oclc=605214049}}
External links
- {{YouTube|02TiweAPm4I|"You Really Got Me"{{snd}}The Kinks (2014 Remaster)}}
- {{YouTube|9X6e7uctAww|"You Really Got Me"{{snd}}Van Halen (Official Music Video)}}
{{The Kinks}}
{{The Kinks singles}}
{{Van Halen}}
{{Authority control}}
Category:British garage rock songs
Category:Arista Records singles
Category:Number-one singles in New Zealand
Category:Reprise Records singles
Category:Song recordings produced by Shel Talmy
Category:Song recordings produced by Ted Templeman
Category:Songs written by Ray Davies